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Welcome to SuperVegan, a shockingly ambitious website made by vegans for vegans. Subscribe to our vegan blog XML and check out our New York City vegan restaurant guide.

  1. vegandrinkssign

    Join us THIS Thursday, May 30, from 7:00pm to 10:00pm for Vegan Drinks NYC to mark our fifth anniversary! Find us at Fontana’s Bar, located at 105 Eldridge Street on the Lower East Side. SoulKofa is back to feed you!

    This month, we’ll be benefiting VINE Sanctuary. VINE (“veganism is the next evolution”), located in Springfield, VT, provides a haven for animals who have escaped or been rescued from the meat, dairy and egg industries or other hurtful circumstances. Stuff your dollars in the donation jar, and buy raffle tickets from VINE to win one of these great prizes:

    • Gift certificate from Champs
    • Cake from Clementine’s Bakery
    • Snack Box from Vegan Cuts
    • Gift certificate from Terri
    • Gift certificate from Vegan Essentials
    • T-shirt from Vaute Couture
    • Gift certificate from Peacefood
    • VegNews subscription and tote bag
    • T-shirt and buttons from Compassion & Co.
    • Two tickets to the Vegan Cook-Off: Hors D’ouevres Competition (June 2nd at the Bell House, Brooklyn)
    • Various vegan cookbooks

    Music by DJ Grand Format, DJ Megan Rascal, and DJ Jason Das!

    Wanna let all your Internet friends know you’re going? RSVP on Facebook if you’re of the mindset to do so.

    Continue Reading…

  2. seitansbloodYesterday the winners of the  Stockholm taco experiment, part of their international Food Experiments tour sponsored by Brooklyn Brewery, were announced. Apparently the meat tacos in Stockholm weren’t all that great, because vegans Tobias Lund and his cohort, both part of Sea-Goat brewing company in Sweden, won the grand prize and the audience’s pick with their “Seitan’s Blood” taco. With a name like that, we can only imagine how delicious the taco must have been. The duo will get a chance to compete in the Food Experiments Championship at Brooklyn Brewery later this year.

    The Food Experiments is a cook-off series started by Nick Suarez and Theo Peck that takes place in various cities in the U.S. and in Stockholm, with a different food theme in each city. Amateur cooks are encouraged to participate, and the winners of each competition gather in Brooklyn at the end of the year for a grand cook-off. We wish the Sea-Goat guys the best of luck at the championships!

  3. So last night and into this morning, the vegan equivalent of the Amy’s Baking Co. Facebook meltdown went down between Jay Astafa and the two current owners of 3 Brothers Pizza Cafe’s Rockville Center location. Of course, nothing can top the ridiculousness of Amy’s Baking Co., and I’m happy to say no one in the vegan community has yet to publicly act like such a hot mess on social media (that I’m aware of), but this incident was certainly embarrassing for everyone involved.

    For those who are unfamiliar with Jay and 3 Brothers, 20-year-old Jay Astafa is quickly establishing himself  as a phenomenal vegan chef. He created the excellent vegan menu at 3 Brothers Pizza Cafe in Rockville Center, NY, which was started by his father and has since changed ownership. Jay recently opened up a second 3 Brothers location in Farmingdale and is no longer involved with the original location. He also hosted a pop-up dinner earlier this month in NYC, called Jay Kitchen, and has expressed interest in expanding it to a full-service restaurant in the city. I know nothing about the new 3 Bros RVC owners, and couldn’t find much about the sale online.

    I’ll pause here to say that if you haven’t eaten at 3 Bros, it’s amazing. I went to the Rockville Center location last year, when Jay’s family still owned it, and it was probably one of the best vegan eating experiences I’ve had in the NYC area. Jay Astafa and 3 Brother’s are a staple in the Long Island vegan community, and the restaurant’s vegan menu, when I tried it, was exceptional. They even served a complimentary bread basket with Earth Balance. Free Earth Balance. The restaurant also offered plenty of gluten free options. I have yet to go back since the Rockville Center location changed hands, nor have I tried the Farmingdale restaurant.

    The Facebook meltdown that occurred last night has since been taken down, but luckily I took some screen caps on my phone. I’ve pasted them below, with commentary. Please note that I didn’t grab shots of the entire incident, only parts of it.

    Continue Reading…

  4. farmraiser

    On Sunday June 2 from 7:30pm – 10pm, Bunna Cafe and A+S Works are hosting The Farmraiser at Dun-Well Doughnuts in Brooklyn as part of Bushwick Open Studios. Tickets are $20 in advance ($25 at the door) and will get you dinner and live entertainment, as well as access to a supposedly cheap cash bar. All proceeds will benefit A+S Works on the Farm, a weekend dance workshop in rural New York put on by A+S Works, an organization that aims to “creates contemporary dance to investigate the intimacy of the human experience through the ceremony of live performance.”
    Continue Reading…

  5. Earlier this week, Mark Bittman wrote an opinion piece called “Why I’m Not a Vegan” in the New York Times. Mixed in with the human-health and environmental arguments for eating less animal products, was the actual explanation promised by the title. It basically comes down to three points: 1) He doesn’t grasp that veganism extends beyond diet, 2)  he thinks humans have a right to exploit other species, and 3) he likes to eat other animals.

    I can kind of excuse the first reason because Bittman is a food writer. Perhaps everything is about food for him. That he’s not a vegan because he buys leather shoes wouldn’t even cross his mind. He wrote a whole book about being vegan for a few hours a day, and he sure as heck just means in terms of diet.

    As to the other two points, I’ll let him speak for himself:

    I can see three scenarios that might lead to universal, full-time veganism: An indisputable series of research results proving that consuming animal products is unquestionably “bad” for us; the emerging dominance of a morality that asserts that we have no right to “exploit” our fellow animals for our own benefit; or an environmental catastrophe that makes agriculture as we know it untenable. All seem unlikely.

    I’ve been thinking about it for three days and I still have no idea what the quote marks around  “exploit” mean. But I’m pretty sure that at the very least they mean Bittman doesn’t think “we” exploit “our fellow animals”. No, we just … Continue Reading…

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